A House For Hermit Crab
A House For Hermit Crab
A House For Hermit Crab
Social Studies
Your older student may enjoy learning more about the different kinds of houses that people
around the world live in. Some people live in huts, others igloos, others tents! Read A
House is a House for Me by Mary Ann Hoberman together and discuss all the different kinds
of houses.
Moving
Hermit Crab had to find a new house. Has your student ever experienced moving into a
new house? What were some of Hermit's feelings (he felt safe/snug in his old shell; he was
frightened when he had to move out). Discuss feelings one may have when having to
move.
Making Friends
How does the hermit crab make friends with all the sea creatures he meets? He compli-
ments them first and then asks for their help. Proverbs tells us that if we want friends, we
have to be friendly! You may want to discuss a time when your student made a new
friend. You may also want to memorize Proverbs 18:24a this week. “A man that hath
friends must shew himself friendly…”
Whosoever cometh to me, and heareth my sayings, and doeth them, I will shew you to
whom he is like: He is like a man which built an house, and digged deep, and laid the foun-
dation on a rock: and when the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently upon that house,
and could not shake it: for it was founded upon a rock. But he that heareth, and doeth not,
is like a man that without a foundation built an house upon the earth; against which the
stream did beat vehemently, and immediately it fell; and the ruin of that house was great.
Make a list of commands (sayings) that God has given us. Are we simply to know His com-
mands? No, we are to DO them. If we do His commands, we are like the wise man. If we
choose to ignore God's commands, we are like the foolish man who did not have a founda-
tion under his house. When the storm came, his house was wiped away.
Language Arts
Vocabulary
murmured- complained
prickly- covered with small sharp points or a sharp pointed part that sticks out
Word Choice
If you student is ready, direct his attention to the different words Eric Carle used for each of
the sea animals as they answer the crab. Instead of using “said” each time, he uses many
different phrases for variety—
(later, when the animals are speaking again, Carle only uses the word said once; he also us-
es murmured, complained, and cried)
Description
Look at the illustration of the seaweed forest. The sea creatures use many different words
to describe it—
dark, dim, gloomy, murky, like nighttime. What other words can you and your student think
of to describe the picture?
Lapbooking Component: Seaweed Forest (list your adjectives inside)
Applied Math
Growing
“Little by little, over the year, Hermit Crab had grown”
Print a copy of this Growth Chart (it uses the twelve months, so you can tie it in with the
other math lesson). Record your student’s weight and height each month for one year. If
you have record of weight and height from other ages (even when your student was born),
make up some math problems using the data. “When you were born you weighed about 9
pounds, now you weigh 42 pounds. How much weight have you gained since birth?”
Using Hermit Crab's Year, review what happened to Hermit Crab in the story.
You can extend this lesson into handwriting (and a memory game). I made month cards
and let my son write in the words (HWOT font). Then, he cut them out and put them in a
pocket in his lapbook. We use the cards for review to see if he can put the months of the
year in order. Print the cards on cardstock if you have it handy.
Science
True Crabs
True crabs have an exoskeleton—an outer shell—that protects and provides support. They
also have five pairs of legs (ten total); one pair—the claws—are used for grasping. They
use these legs to walk sideways. (For a fun P.E. lesson this week, teach your child the crab
walk). Some crabs live in the ocean, and some crabs live on land. There are about 4,500
different kinds (or species) of true crabs! Additionally, there are about 500 different kinds
of Hermit Crabs.
Hermit Crabs
Hermit Crabs also have ten legs. Even though they are considered crustaceans (as are true
crabs), they are different than a regular old crab. Hermit Crabs do not have exoskeletons to
protect their soft abdomens, they have to go searching for “homes” (empty seashells) to
serve this purpose.
Your older student may wish to do more research in order to compare/contrast true crabs
with hermit crabs (a Venn diagram may be a good way to record the research).
Ocean Life
There is a note at the end of the book the main sea creatures mentioned. Find some library
books and read more information about the diverse creatures living in the sea.
Lapbooking Component Sea Creatures Tab Book
Sea Weed
Seaweed is not really a weed, but it is algae. It is found in the water, but it is not a true
plant. Many kinds of seaweed are edible and commonly found on the table in Asian coun-
tries. Seaweed is rich in vitamins and iodine. Three main groups of seaweed are: green,
brown, and red.
Like other plants, seaweed use sunlight to produce food. However, they are not considered
true plants because they do not have roots, stalks, leaves, flowers, or fruit. Instead of roots,
seaweed have bases or finger-like disks that enable them to stick to the roughness of
rocks. These finger-like discs are not like roots (which enable a plant to pick up substanc-
es). This is not a problem for seaweed, though, because seaweed gets all the minerals it
needs directly from the sea water.
Your older student may enjoy learning that seaweed is actually found in all types of our
food. Look at labels of the food you buy to see if any of the "seaweed" ingredients are listed:
Carrageenan - compounds extracted from red algae used in stabilizing and gelling foods,
cosmetics, and medicine
Alginates - extracted from brown algae used to make water-based products thicker,
creamier, and more stable over extreme temperatures and time (making the product last
longer)
Beta Carotene - a natural pigment from green algae used as a yellow-orange food color-
ing in food products
Shells
This book is a great opportunity to discuss shells and their inhabitants. We used a book
What Lives in a Shell to discuss these things. We also had a fun article in Your Big Backyard
(July 2007) that helped us learn the different kinds of shells.
Collage Style
Discuss the technique of collage with your student using the illustrations in the story. Try to
make some collage type paintings like Eric Carle. Give your student a large piece of white
paper. Use bright color tempera paint and cover the paper in the color of choice leaving
texture (making the brush strokes noticeable) in the paint. Let your student do this with a
few different colors using one color per piece of paper. Set aside paintings to dry. After the
painting is dry, cut pieces from the paper to create a sea creature. Glue down the cut pieces
on white paper.
You could also replicate your student's favorite illustration from the story. (Note: when we
study Eric Carle books at our house, we usually replicate the cover page.)
Be adventurous and go to the pet store to look at the Hermit Crabs (be warned! You just
might come home with one!)
My Growth Chart
Height Weight
Month
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December
© HSS 2006
Plain Decorate
having no pattern or to make more attractive
decoration by adding something
that is beautiful
Gingerly
very cautious or careful Dim
not bright or clear, hard
to see
Murky
very dark, filled with fog
Gloomy
total darkness
Tidy
Murmured well ordered and cared
complained for, clean
Prickly
covered with small Fierce
sharp points or a sharp wild or threatening in
pointed part that sticks appearance
out
Gratefully
expressing thanks
SAND
ROCK
SHELLS
CONCH
SNAIL
SCALLOP
MUSSEL
SHELLS
CONCH
SNAIL
SCALLOP
MUSSEL
Color the crab. Decorate his shell with jewels, sequins, feathers, mosaic paper
tiles, stickers, stamps, dried pasta, whatever else you can think of! Be creative!
Cut the hermit crab out and paste him in your lapbook.
Hermit Crab REMOVE THIS AREA (Cut away so you have just a tab left)
Assembly Directions:
Cut the six strips along the solid outer lines. If there is a rectangle piece in the right cor-
ner of the strip, cut it off as indicated (remove this area). Stack your strips in order —
1. Sea Creatures
2. Hermit Crab
3. Sea Urchin
4. Starfish
5. Sea Anemone
6. Coral
Staple at the left side of the front page (Sea Creatures) where the marks are indicated.
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
MARCH
APRIL
MAY
JUNE
JULY
AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
OCTOBER
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER
JANUARY
FEBRUARY
MARCH
APRIL
MAY
JUNE
JULY
AUGUST
SEPTEMBER
OCTOBER
NOVEMBER
DECEMBER
APARTMENT
HOUSE BOAT
PUEBLO
TENT
IGLOO
GRASS HUT
Hermit Crab’s Year
He met the sea urchins. He wandered into the He found the lantern
seaweed forest. fish.
Cut pieces apart and glue on to the appropriate spot on “Hermit Crab’s
Year” (previous page).
Predators
Kingdom
Anatomy
Phylum
Class
Order
Genus
Species
Kingdom
Phylum
Class
Order
Genus
Species